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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Russia resumes night strikes on major Ukrainian cities, ending brief reprieve agreed between Putin and Trump

February 03, 2026
Russia resumes night strikes on major Ukrainian cities, ending brief reprieve agreed between Putin and Trump

Russia launched its biggest missile and drone attack on Ukraine so far this year on Tuesday, according to Ukrainian authorities, cutting heat to tens of thousands of people and ending a brief reprieve agreed to by Moscow and Washington as Ukrainians grapple with plummeting winter temperatures.

CNN Smoke billows from an apartment building after it was struck by a drone during Russian missile and drone attacks, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on February 3, 2026. - Thomas Peter/Reuters

CNN staff in the capital Kyiv reported hearing several strong explosions in the city and authorities in Dnipro, Kharkiv, Sumy, Zaporizhzhia and Odesa reported Russian strikes.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Tuesday that Ukraine is waiting for US reaction to Russia's latest wave of attacks on Ukraine's power grid.

"We are expecting the United States to respond about the Russian strikes. It was America's proposal to suspend strikes on energy facilities during this period of diplomacy and cold winter weather," Zelensky said in his nightly address.

Russian President Vladimir Putin last week agreed to pause attacking major Ukrainian cities and energy infrastructure until Sunday, following a "personal request" from US President Donald Trump, according to the Kremlin.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump was unsurprised about Russia's recent attacks on Ukraine.

Speaking to reporters outside the West Wing, Leavitt said "I spoke with the president about it this morning, and his reaction was, unfortunately, unsurprised."

She said planned negotiations between Russia and Ukraine would proceed later this week in Abu Dhabi, with the US in a mediating role.

The pause also came following trilateral talks between Russia, Ukraine and the US in Abu Dhabi, the first such talks since Moscow's invasion in February 2022.

Zelensky said Russia's attack was focused on energy facilities across at least six regions and involved 70 missiles and 450 attack drones, which according to a CNN tally, is the largest attack of the year so far.

"Taking advantage of the coldest days of winter to terrorize people is more important to Russia than turning to diplomacy," Zelensky said Tuesday.

"The Russian army exploited the US proposal to briefly halt strikes not to support diplomacy, but to stockpile missiles and wait until the coldest days of the year, when temperatures across large parts of Ukraine drop below -20°C (-4°F)," Zelensky later added in a social media post.

Almost 1,200 high-rise buildings across two districts in the capital Kyiv were left without heat due to the strikes, according to mayor Vitaliy Klitschko.

Several multi-storey residential buildings and a kindergarten had been damaged and six people were injured, according to Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the Kyiv military administration.

One resident of a building in Kyiv that was damaged overnight told CNN that she felt Russia's attacks on residential infrastructure were "all being done on purpose to make people kind of give up."

"I couldn't imagine that in such cold weather they could hit residential buildings," said Tetyana, who gave her first name only.

Residents take shelter inside a metro station during a Russian overnight missile and drone strike, with temperatures falling below –20°C (about -4 degrees Fahrenheit), amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on February 3, 2026. - Alina Smutko/Reuters

Video posted by the State Emergency Service shows flames billowing out of a high-rise residential block and response teams working through the night in freezing conditions.

In southern Ukraine's Odesa, more than 50,000 people were left without power, the regional military administration said. The country's second largest city Kharkiv was attacked by Russian missiles and drones that targeted the city's energy infrastructure, causing damage that will leave at least 820 high-rise buildings without heat supply, Kharkiv mayor Ihor Terekhov said on Telegram. And Dnipro, in eastern Ukraine, was attacked by ballistic missiles, according to the Ukrainian Air Force.

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"The goal is obvious: to cause maximum damage and leave the city without heat in severe frost," Terekhov said.

Kyiv residents spent 7 hours under an air raid alert, and the attack came as Ukrainians contend with some of the coldest temperatures this winter. On early Tuesday morning local time, the temperature in Kyiv was -20 Celsius ( - 4 Fahrenheit) and in Kharkiv -25 C (-13 F).

Residents could be seen taking shelter at the Kyiv metro bundled up in thick coats and hats, and huddled under sleeping bags and blankets.

This is the first time that strikes have been reported on energy facilities and major cities since last Thursday, according to Ukrainian authorities, though Russia continued to strike logistics routes and transport infrastructure during that time, withdeadly results.

"This is not a side effect of war. It is Russian strategy. Winter temperatures (being) used as a weapon. Heat and electricity as targets," EU Ambassador to Ukraine, Katarina Mathernova, wrote in a statement, alongside a photo of herself sheltering overnight in her bathroom. "Every night, I think of the millions of people across the country shivering in their homes."

Other attacks on Tuesday extended beyond power stations. In Zaporizhzhia, drone strikes damaged a building, cars and shops. The strikes killed two teenagers and injured eight others, according to Ivan Fedorov, the head of the region's military administration.

"The air raid alert in Zaporizhzhia has been in effect for 23 hours straight," Fedorov wrote in a post on Telegram. "As soon as the security situation allows, we will begin assessing the damage. But, unfortunately, human lives cannot be brought back."

'Survival mode'

A drone hits an apartment building during a Russian missile and drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on February 3, 2026. - Gleb Garanich/Reuters

Before the Abu Dhabi talks, Russia had stepped up attacks on Ukraine's energy infrastructure, leaving swaths of the country facing power shortages and outages in the depths of winter.

The Kremlin has confirmed that the next round of trilateral talks between Ukraine, Russia and the United States aimed at ending the war will take place on Wednesday and Thursday in Abu Dhabi.

Ukraine's biggest private energy company DTEK said the attack early Tuesday hit thermal power plants, damaging critical energy infrastructure and equipment "at a time when heat and electricity are essential."

DTEK's CEO Maxim Timchenko postedfootageTuesday showing the aftermath of an attack on a power plant at an undisclosed location, where the energy facility had been reduced to a pile of mangled metal and charred concrete.

The company is in "survival mode," Timchenko earlier told CNN, with the next few weeks critical as the country grapples with plummeting temperature and the "worst condition of our energy system in modern history."

DTEK currently operates five thermal power plants in Ukraine, of which two are currently offline and the other three are functioning at low capacity, Timchenko told CNN Monday in an interview from Dnipro.

Residents take shelter inside a metro station during a Russian overnight missile and drone strike, with temperatures falling below –20°C (about -4 degrees Fahrenheit), amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on February 3, 2026. - Alina Smutko/Reuters

He said the company was working to repair the damage from repeated Russian attacks, but it's often not possible in freezing weather conditions.

His biggest hope right now is that the energy ceasefire announced last week, which he says brought a five-day reprieve in attacks on DTEK's thermal power plants, is extended in talks in Abu Dhabi this week.

DTEK said Sunday that Moscow had launched a "large-scale attack" on its coal mines in the region, striking a bus carrying miners who had just finished their shift killing at least 12.

CNN's Helen Regan, Lauren Kent, Clare Sebastian, Svitlana Vlasova, Max Saltman and Kevin Liptak contributed reporting.

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Immigration agents draw guns and arrest activists following them in Minneapolis

February 03, 2026
Immigration agents draw guns and arrest activists following them in Minneapolis

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Immigration officers with guns drawn arrested activists who were trailing their vehicles on Tuesday in Minneapolis, while education leaders described anxiety and fear in Minnesota schools from the ongoing federal sweeps.

Both are signs that tension remains in the Minneapolis area after the departure ofhigh-profile commanderGreg Bovino of U.S. Border Patrol and the arrival of Trump administration border czar Tom Homan, which followed thefatal shootingof protester Alex Pretti.

"There's less smoke on the ground," Gov. Tim Walz said, referring to tear gas and other irritants used by officers against protesters, "but I think it's more chilling than it was last week because of the shift to the schools, the shift to the children."

At least one person who had an anti-ICE message on clothing was handcuffed while face-down on the ground. An Associated Press photographer witnessed the arrests.

ICE agents are changing their tactics

Federal agents in the Twin Cities lately have been conducting more targeted immigration arrests at homes and neighborhoods, rather than staging in parking lots. The convoys have been harder to find and less aggressive. Alerts in activist group chats have been more about sightings than immigration-related detainments.

Several cars followed officers through south Minneapolis after there were reports of them knocking at homes. Officers stopped their vehicles and ordered activists to come out of a car at gunpoint. Agents told reporters at the scene to stay back and threatened to use pepper spray.

A federal judge last month putlimits on how officerstreat motorists who are following them but not obstructing their operations. Safely following agents "at an appropriate distance does not, by itself, create reasonable suspicion to justify a vehicle stop," the judge said. An appeals court, however, set the order aside.

Bovino, who was leading immigration enforcement in Minneapolis and other big U.S. cities, left town last week, shortly after Pretti's death became thesecond local killingof a U.S. citizen in January.

Homan, who was dispatched to Minnesota to succeed Bovino, haswarned that protesterscould face consequences if they interfere with officers.

Operation Metro Surge affecting schools

Walz and education leaders held a news conference to say the presence of immigration officers is frightening some school communities. Brenda Lewis, superintendent of Fridley Public Schools in suburban Minneapolis, said she's been followed twice by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents since speaking publicly on Jan. 27 and that school board members have had ICE vehicles outside their homes.

Lewis, a U.S. citizen, said she's seen SUVs with tinted windows, multiple masked people inside and out-of-state license plates. She goes on neighborhood patrols near schools with a security guard.

"Students are afraid to come to school, parents are afraid to drop them off," Lewis said. "Staff are coming to work wondering if today will be the day something happens in one of our buildings."

She said Fridley, which has Somali and Ecuadorian families, has added security, adjusted drop-off procedures and increased mental health support. Tracy Xiong, a social worker in the Columbia Heights district, said she's been coordinating grocery deliveries to school families and finding volunteers to drive children.

There was no immediate response to a request for comment from the Department of Homeland Security and ICE about the arrests in south Minneapolis and the concerns of educators.

Grand jury seeks communications, records

Meanwhile, Tuesday was the deadline for Minneapolis to produce information for a federal grand jury. It's part of a U.S. Justice Department request for records of any effort to stifle the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. Officials have denounced it as a bullying tactic.

"We have done nothing wrong and have nothing to hide, but when the federal government weaponizes the criminal justice system against political opponents, it's important to stand up and fight back," said Ally Peters, spokesperson for Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat.

She said the city was complying, but she didn't elaborate. Other state and local offices run by Democrats were given subpoenas, though it's not known whether they had the same deadline. People familiar with the matter have told the AP that the subpoenas arerelated to an investigationinto whether Minnesota officials obstructed enforcement through public statements.

No release for man in Omar incident

Elsewhere, a man charged with squirting apple cider vinegar on Democratic U.S. Rep.Ilhan Omarwill remain in jail. U.S. Magistrate Judge David Schultz granted a federal prosecutor's request to keep Anthony Kazmierczak in custody.

"We simply cannot have protesters and people — whatever side of the aisle they're on — running up to representatives who are conducting official business, and holding town halls, and assaulting them," Assistant U.S. Attorney Benjamin Bejar said Tuesday.

Defense attorney John Fossum said the vinegar posed a low risk to Omar. He said Kazmierczak's health problems weren't being properly addressed in jail and that his release would be appropriate.

Raza reported from Sioux Falls, South Dakota. AP reporters Ed White in Detroit and Hannah Fingerhut in Des Moines, Iowa, contributed.

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Goldman Sachs' top lawyer accepted gifts from 'Uncle Jeffrey' Epstein, documents show

February 03, 2026
Goldman Sachs' top lawyer accepted gifts from 'Uncle Jeffrey' Epstein, documents show

By Arasu Kannagi Basil and Saeed Azhar

Reuters

Feb 3 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs' top lawyer Kathryn Ruemmler accepted gifts from late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and advised him on how to address press inquiries regarding his crimes, according to ​a Reuters review of emails among millions of documents the U.S. Department of Justice released last week.

Ruemmler, who was ‌also White House counsel during the Obama administration, referred to Epstein in emails as "Uncle Jeffrey" and received gifts from him including wine and a handbag, the documents ‌show.

Ruemmler had a large number of communications with Epstein from 2014 to 2019, even after the disgraced financier's 2008 guilty plea for procuring a person under the age of 18 for prostitution, the documents showed.

These communications included advising Epstein on how to respond to a media query in 2019 concerning the alleged special legal treatment he received because of his connections, the emails show.

"I was a defense attorney when I ⁠dealt with Jeffrey Epstein," Ruemmler said in ‌a statement on Tuesday. "I got to know him as a lawyer and that was the foundation of my relationship with him.

"I had no knowledge of any ongoing criminal conduct on his part, and I did ‍not know him as the monster he has been revealed to be," she continued. "These decade-old private emails you are selectively referencing and pruriently reporting on have nothing to do with my work at Goldman Sachs."

Goldman spokesperson Tony Fratto said in an email that Epstein often offered unsolicited favors and ​gifts to many business contacts.

Goldman has backed Ruemmler in the past, with CEO David Solomon calling her "an excellent general counsel."

Fratto has ‌said Goldman understood the nature of Ruemmler's prior job as a white-collar defense lawyer, and was satisfied after conducting its own diligence.

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RUEMMLER RECEIVED GIFTS FROM EPSTEIN, DOCUMENTS SHOW

The newly released documents provided more details about Epstein's ties to prominent people in politics, finance and academia, both before and after his 2008 guilty plea.

Epstein was arrested on sex trafficking charges in July 2019. He died in his Manhattan jail cell the following month, in what New York City's chief medical examiner called a suicide.

In 2018, a third party, whose name the ⁠government redacted, emailed Ruemmler to say that Epstein wanted to buy a ​band for her Apple Watch.

"I love the Hermes one!" she responded. "If truly okay ​with him to do the Hermes, I would love the 40 mm, stainless Hermes with bleu indigo swift leather double tour."

In 2019, she thanked Epstein for more gifts.

"Am totally tricked out by Uncle Jeffrey today! Jeffrey ‍boots, handbag, and watch!" Ruemmler wrote.

Bloomberg and ⁠the Financial Times earlier reported on the email exchanges.

In another set of emails from 2016, Epstein asked Ruemmler what Donald Trump, who later became U.S. president, should say when asked questions about him.

Ruemmler responded that Trump should say: "I knew Epstein ⁠professionally and always had positive dealings with him. I don't know anything about his personal legal issues other than what I have read in public reports, ‌and therefore don't have any comment."

(Reporting by Arasu Kannagi Basil in Bengaluru and Saeed Azhar in New York; Additional ‌reporting by Jonathan Stempel, Editing by Lananh Nguyen and Lisa Shumaker)

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NFL Pro Bowl: Shedeur Sanders and others are playing flag football Tuesday of Super Bowl Week — with Olympics in mind

February 03, 2026
NFL Pro Bowl: Shedeur Sanders and others are playing flag football Tuesday of Super Bowl Week — with Olympics in mind

The NFL's Pro Bowl is being played Tuesday night in San Francisco ahead ofSuper Bowl LXthis weekend.

Yahoo Sports first reported on the move in New York at the fall owners meetings. Here's a guide to what you need to know about the game.

When and where is the Pro Bowl?

8 p.m. ET Tuesday, at Moscone Center in San Francisco

How can I watch the Pro Bowl?

It will be televised on ESPN.

What is the Pro Bowl format?

Flag football, 50-yard playing field, two 10-yard end zones, touchdowns worth 6 points, with teams allowed to try for 1 point after from the 5-yard line or 2 points after from the 10

Who is playing in the Pro Bowl, and why are some stars skipping it?

Shedeur Sanders,Joe Burrowand other big names. Fans voted on the initial rosters, but for various reasons several high-profile replacements have been selected.

Sanders was selected as a replacement for Drake Maye, who will lead the Patriots in Sunday's Super Bowl against the Seahawks. Burrow is replacing injured Bills quarterback Josh Allen. Joe Flacco, the AFC's third QB, is alsoreplacing an injured Justin Herbert of the Chargers.

The NFC quarterbacks include Detroit's Jared Goff, Philadelphia's Jalen Hurts and Dallas' Dak Prescott. Here are the full Pro Bowl rosters for theNFCandAFC.

The coaches are two 49ers legends, with Steve Young coaching the AFC and Jerry Rice leading the NFC.

Why are they playing the Pro Bowl on a Tuesday, and why is the format flag football?

The answers to these questions are intertwined, so we'll lump them together. Theformat of the Pro Bowl shifted to include flag footballand skills competitions starting with the 2023 event, in response to feedback from coaches, players and others involved. This was in part to minimize the risk of injury and to refresh an event that had become stagnant overall.

The focus has now moved toward the flag football element with the Olympics in mind. Asreported by Yahoo Sports' Jori Epstein this past fallat the annual league meetings in New York, the NFL is committed to spotlighting flag football on a global stage ahead of the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, when the sport will be introduced into competition for the first time andNFL players will have opportunities to participate.

"We're committed to this flag football format," NFL executive vice president Peter O'Reilly said in the fall. "This is clearly rooted in our commitment to flag and making sure we're honoring players in the right way. There's a broader strategic play here, and that's one of the main reasons we brought it into Super Bowl week."

Why are they playing the Pro Bowl in a convention center?

NFL executive vice president Peter O'Reilly addressed this tooin the fall. He acknowledged the Moscone Center's capacity will be smaller than recent Pro Bowl venues, but the game will nonetheless be ticketed. It's a necessary evil, if you will, of the Pro Bowl being spotlighted during Super Week.

What is the future of the Pro Bowl?

Per Yahoo Sports' Jori Epstein,expect this flag football-in-the-Super-Bowl-host-city format to continue to the Super Bowl's 2027 stage in Los Angeles, which will also host the Olympics in 2028.

There could be, however, a growing issue with player participation.New York Jets QB Justin Fields reportedly declinedto participate this year to focus on his offseason training, and that might become a more common thing as there isn't a ton of upside to taking part.

Players on the winning team willreportedly get $96,000 each,while players on the losing team will reportedly receive $48,000 each. That's a great chunk of change to you and me and a lot of NFL players who line the middle and back ends of rosters — but not to the stars people will pay and watch to see.

Still, there figures to be enough participation from players and backing from the NFL to continue through the target year of the 2028 Olympics. After that, who knows.

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These teams have March Madness bracketology's most polarizing resumes

February 03, 2026
These teams have March Madness bracketology's most polarizing resumes

March Madnessis so ingrained as a national spectacle at this point the controversial selections and snubs are an inevitability, and even an expected part of the show whencollege basketballfans gather on Selection Sunday for the reveal of the bracket.

Bracketologysprouted from our collective thirst to know what teams must do to hear their name on Selection Sunday, and where those teams might be ranked. So too dida collection of rankingsbased on computer models and formulas and, like last year, seven of those metrics will be listed on the team sheets used by the selection committee as it meets heading into Selection Sunday to determine the field for the 2026 NCAA tournament.

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Each ranking or rating is separated into two distinct categories — predictive metrics and results-based metrics. TheNCAA Evaluation Tool (NET),KenPom,ESPN's BPIandthe Torvik rankingsare considered predictive rankings that measure how good a team is based on its offensive and defensive efficiency, adjusted for opponent strength and location. TheKPI,ESPN's Strength of Record (SOR)andWins Above Bubble (WAB)are results-based rankings that judge how hard it was for a team to attain its résumé.

For many teams, the two types of ratings largely converge by the end of the season. For others, however, there can be a wide swath of outcomes based on how a game was played and whether it was won or lost. These are the schools from major andmid-major conferencesthat could inspire the most robust conversation and debate among committee members, either over their selection into the 2026 NCAA tournament as an at-large and/or their potential seeding in the field, due to the differences between their ranking in predictive metrics and results-based metrics.

Here's an early look at 10 teams with polarizing profiles ahead of Selection Sunday based on the metrics used for the men's NCAA tournament:

MARCH MADNESS BRACKETOLOGY:Houston, Florida rise in NCAA tournament seeding

March Madness 2026: NCAA tournament metrics' most polarizing teams

All records and rankings through games played on Feb.2

Florida(16-6)

  • NET: 12

  • KenPom: 7

  • BPI: 7

  • Torvik: 6

  • KPI: 20

  • SOR: 18

  • WAB: 18

How the NCAA tournament selection committee seeds the defending national champions is developing into a fascinating subplot for Selection Sunday afterFloridadidn't get wins in high-profile nonconference games against Arizona, Duke and UConn. But the Gators remain in the SEC driver's seat with a huge matchup against Texas A&M looming on Feb. 7. Predictive rankings have them already in contention for a top-two seed, but results-based metrics have Florida hovering just inside the top-20. Will committee members give the Gators the benefit of the doubt over teams with fewer losses?

Louisville(15-6)

  • NET: 17

  • KenPom: 16

  • BPI: 11

  • Torvik: 16

  • KPI: 28

  • SOR: 32

  • WAB: 26

The Cardinals are 11-2 when freshman Mikel Brown is in the lineup, with losses to only Duke and Arkansas, and look poised to return to the NCAA tournament in coach Pat Kelsey's second season. But Louisville is 4-4 without Brown, including three losses in four games last month as ACC play got underway. So the Cardinals are positioned as high as No. 11 in predictive metrics as a result of their ceiling with Brown, but their results-based rankings are as low as No. 32. If those dynamics remain the same over the next month, there will be lingering questions about how Louisville will be seeded by the selection committee.

Indiana(15-7)

  • NET: 30

  • KenPom: 33

  • BPI: 25

  • Torvik: 23

  • KPI: 49

  • SOR: 37

  • WAB: 39

The Hoosiers are as high as No. 23 and as low as No. 49 among the seven metrics used by the NCAA tournament selection committee, with a weak schedule and lack of significant wins until recent triumphs over Purdue and UCLA leaving them in an interesting spot to start February. Indiana hasn't slipped up against inferior competition and had several metric-boosting blowouts to help juice its predictive metrics. The Hoosiers would likely make the NCAA tournament field as an at-large team if Selection Sunday were this week, but they're only a loss or two away from being on the wrong side of the bubble again.

UCF(17-4)

UCF Knights guard Riley Kugel (2) dunks the ball during the second half against the Oklahoma State Cowboys at Gallagher-Iba Arena on Jan. 6, 2026.
  • NET: 37

  • KenPom: 45

  • BPI: 51

  • Torvik: 46

  • KPI: 15

  • SOR: 21

  • WAB: 19

The Knights' résumé won't be straightforward for selection committee members if UCF continues on its current trajectory, with the predictive metrics of a bubble team and results more in line with a top-six seed. The Knights didn't test themselves much in the nonconference schedule, but got a key road win over Texas A&M, already beat Kansas and Texas Tech in Big 12 play and have no bad losses. Coach Johnny Dawkins is having his best season since he last made the NCAA tournament in 2019.

Texas(13-9)

  • NET: 39

  • KenPom: 34

  • BPI: 35

  • Torvik: 38

  • KPI: 63

  • SOR: 54

  • WAB: 52

The Longhorns could present challenges for the committee if they linger along the NCAA tournament bubble around Selection Sunday. Their predictive metrics rank among the top-40 after some impressive SEC wins over Vanderbilt and Alabama last month, but they've also got a Quad 3 loss at home to Mississippi State and only one nonconference win of note on their résumé. Texas still has chances to boost its profile with games looming against Florida, Texas A&M and Arkansas at the end of SEC play, but its profile can't withstand too many more setbacks.

Washington(12-10)

  • NET: 47

  • KenPom: 46

  • BPI: 44

  • Torvik: 44

  • KPI: 64

  • SOR: 60

  • WAB: 60

The Huskies would be a fascinating test case if Selection Sunday were this week instead of next month as no Big Ten team has a wider gap between its metrics. The predictive rankings are all mostly the same, ranging from No. 43-47, and put Washington on the bubble. The results-based rankings are similar as well, only those range from No. 60-64 because of the team's 10 losses. That would put the Huskies in danger of missing the NCAA tournament. None of those defeats, however, are outside of the first two quadrants.

California(16-6)

  • NET: 51

  • KenPom: 54

  • BPI: 69

  • Torvik: 56

  • KPI: 40

  • SOR: 48

  • WAB: 41

The predictive metrics haven't caught up to the results-based metrics after Cal knocked off UNC, Stanford and Miami to emerge from a three-game losing skid. TheGolden Bearshave played their way onto the NCAA tournament bubble and have no bad losses on their ledger. A few closer-than-expected results facing a weak nonconference schedule leaves them limited margin for error the next month.

Oklahoma State(15-6)

  • NET: 68

  • KenPom: 57

  • BPI: 71

  • Torvik: 70

  • KPI: 46

  • SOR: 44

  • WAB: 46

The Cowboys look like they could provide a window into how the NCAA tournament selection committee judges a team that does well in nonconference play only to then stumble in conference action. Oklahoma State is considered the 12th-best team in the Big 12 by predictive metrics after it started league play with five losses in eight games. But it's nearly 22 spots higher nationally, on average, in results-based metrics thanks to early wins over Texas A&M, USF, Northwestern and Grand Canyon that have aged better than expected. The Cowboys still have a shot based on the strength of the Big 12.

George Mason(20-2)

  • NET: 65

  • KenPom: 76

  • BPI: 68

  • Torvik: 108

  • KPI: 35

  • SOR: 40

  • WAB: 43

This one-time Final Four phenomenon could be poised for another mid-major NCAA tournament run involving a borderline Selection Sunday résumé. The Patriots have won 20 of their first 22 games, but both losses came in rare Quad 1 or 2 opportunities. Their predictive metrics continue to lag significantly when compared to their results-based rankings. It doesn't help thatGeorge Masonwon't face Atlantic-10 Conference favorite Saint Louis until its regular-season finale. The Patriots need more quality win opportunities.

Miami (Ohio)(22-0)

  • NET: 53

  • KenPom: 90

  • BPI: 91

  • Torvik: 80

  • KPI: 54

  • SOR: 24

  • WAB: 33

The undefeated darlings of the MACcould present the NCAA tournament selection committee with a real issue to sort through if they were to get upset before claiming the league's automatic berth into March Madness. KenPom and ESPN's BPI have Miami rated outside the top 75 with no Quad 1 wins, but the RedHawks rank among the top 35 in ESPN's strength of record and the NCAA's wins above bubble metrics thanks to their unblemished record. Would Miami with one or two losses merit an at-large berth on Selection Sunday?

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NCAA bracketology 2026: March Madness metrics unsure of these 10 teams

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How the Cavaliers can get James Harden and Giannis Antetokounmpo ... and LeBron James

February 03, 2026
How the Cavaliers can get James Harden and Giannis Antetokounmpo ... and LeBron James

Imagine this scene:

Yahoo Sports

LeBron James and his son Bronny, in Cavs uniforms, capping off a historic farewell tour with another championship in Cleveland. As they tackle each other in euphoria, James Harden peers over at Giannis Antetokounmpo, both also wearing wine-and-gold, and laughs maniacally at the craziness of it all. Harden finally earns his championship — and ruins the chances of his former team, the Oklahoma City Thunder, at a three-peat in the process. (Yes, I'm projecting the Thunder win it all this year.)

That's the storybook ending for LeBron's 24-year career. Walking off as a champion — something Michael Jordan once had, but gave it up with a last-ditch run with the Washington Wizards.

And believe it or not, it can be done. Especially since the Eastern Conference is wide open.

The trade rumor mill is kicking into high gear ahead of Thursday's trade deadline. And it's possible Harden and Antetokounmpo (and, in time, LeBron and Bronny, too) will be packing their bags for Ohio soon.

Here's how it all would go down.

Trade 1: James Harden for Darius Garland

On Monday night, kicking off trade deadline week, Yahoo Sports' Kelly Iko broke the news that the LA Clippers and Cleveland Cavaliers wereengaged in James Harden trade talks. According to Iko, the Cavs were leading the chase for Harden's services at the deadline.

The Harden news may have blindsided some considering the Clippers have pulled off one of the greatest in-season turnarounds in NBA history, going 16-3 at one point after starting the season 6-21. But for anyone who has been paying attention to Harden's career-long pattern of asking out, it was only a matter of time before Harden and the Clippers headed for a divorce.

When Harden arrived in ClipperLand in 2023, my first reaction was:Great, so where's he going next?Sure enough, less than three years later, amid a team resurgence for the ages, the NBA's most mercurial star was suddenly sitting out games for "personal reasons" and, voila, trade talks emerged.

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There has been no formal trade request, but we can read the tea leaves here. Harden is eligible for a contract extension and hasn't gotten one. His co-star, Kawhi Leonard, is at the heart of an NBA investigation into Steve Ballmer and the Clippers front office for cap circumvention allegations regarding an apparent no-show contract for Leonard. Recently, Leonard and Harden were noticeably left off the All-Star team despite more-than-worthy campaigns and the Clippers hosting the All-Star Game at the Intuit Dome. That's a lot of bad vibes.

The Cavs reportedly hold interest because of Darius Garland's injury woes and the need to keep Donovan Mitchell happy amid a pressure-packed, underwhelming season. Harden has been playing brilliantly this season and, perhaps more importantly, his contract is almost perfectly aligned with Garland's salary of $39 million this season, making a one-for-one swap possible under the CBA rules. Key to all of this is the Cavs are a second-apron team and therefore cannot aggregate contracts to make a deal work.

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So that's the first deal: Harden for Garland straight up. I wouldn't be surprised if the Clippers ask for Cleveland's 2026 second-round pick for taking on another year of Garland's contract, even if he is just 26 years old. The Clippers get a much younger two-time All-Star guard who is entering his prime, but they've notably kept their 2027-28 books completely clean for a potential massive free agency pursuit. Acquiring Garland would be a minor departure from that strategy.

Trade 2: Giannis and Thanasis Antetokounmpo for Evan Mobley and picks

I mentioned earlier the Cavs are operating as a second-apron team, which complicates any Giannis trade talks for Cleveland. They can't aggregate salaries unless they dump about $14 million worth of salary to a third party. Enter the Brooklyn Nets who, according to Spotrac salary data, havejuuuuuustenough space to grease the wheels for Milwaukee and Cleveland to consummate a deal. Assist point to my pal Kevin Pelton, who proposed the general framework.

So the trade: Cleveland receives Giannis and Thanasis Antetokounmpo; Milwaukee nets Evan Mobley, Lonzo Ball and a 2031 first-round pick from Cleveland, and Tyrese Martin from Brooklyn; Brooklyn absorbs Max Strus' contract and earns the right to swap first-round picks with Cleveland in 2028, 2030 and 2032.

The Cavs need Harden to make Giannis feel comfortable that they're championship-ready enough for him to commit to a long-term extension when he's eligible for a four-year, $275 million pact this upcoming October. With Garland sidelined, I'm not sure the Cavs, as is, have enough to get that critical sign-off from Antetokounmpo. Last thing the Cavs want is to give up Mobley only for Antetokounmpo to walk in the summer of 2027.

Would a starting five of Harden, Mitchell, Jaylon Tyson, Antetokounmpo and Jarrett Allen win a title? Maybe. But they could use a star small forward to complete the set.

What's that? Is that The King's music!?

Move 3: LeBron James signs in free agency with Cavs

LeBron James is a $52.6 million expiring contract this season and has veto power on any trade. It's possible he engineers a deal (again, he has to sign off on a trade for it to go through) to Cleveland to set up hislast hurrah next season back home, but doing so would probably gut the Cavs' depth ahead of a championship pursuit.

Instead, James could slow his roll and wait until this summer to head back to Cleveland when he could sign a Dirk-esque contract with the Cavs. Why would he take a discount if he's still playing at an All-Star level? It would serve as something of a compromise so the Cavs would trade for son Bronny, who is due a guaranteed $2.3 million next season.

The Cavs could head into next season with a starting lineup of Mitchell, Harden, James, Antetokounmpo and Allen with Tyson, Dennis Schröder, Keon Ellis (eligible for extension), Bronny James and Sam Merrill anchoring the second unit. Maybe bring back Kevin Love for the double farewell tour? Can we get J.R. Smith off the golf course and in Cleveland again?

The backdrop of all of these Cavs blockbuster deals is fortifying a long-term commitment from Mitchell, who can walk as a free agent in the summer of 2027. He holds a player option for $53.8 million during a summer in which the Knicks, Lakers and Clippers could carve out the requisite cap space to hit the Donovan dance floor.

Moving past the current star-studded core that has underwhelmed in the playoffs would certainly be a risk, but bringing three former MVPs into the fold would represent the kind of massive swing that might inspire Mitchell's confidence that Cleveland is his home. Sure, the Cavs would be banking on three players on the wrong side of 30 (and the wrong side of 40 in LeBron's case), but it's not like the youthful core in Cleveland has been cutting it in the playoffs.

If the Harden-Giannis-LeBron Plan is truly the goal, it would make a lot of sense why Klutch Sports has been attempting to represent Giannis,according to TrueHoop's Henry Abbottlast week. Having Giannis as a client wouldn't just be a boon for Rich Paul when Antetokounmpo comes up for a massive extension, but it would also serve as an information pipeline to assure everyone is on the same page in Cleveland.

Would the blockbuster deals be enough to win James a fifth championship and ride into the sunset as a champion? Perhaps. If you thought the 2016 championship in Cleveland couldn't be topped, I present to you the James retirement plan with Harden finally earning his ring and Giannis winning his second.

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Iranian boats approach US-flagged tanker in Strait of Hormuz, maritime sources say

February 03, 2026
Iranian boats approach US-flagged tanker in Strait of Hormuz, maritime sources say

DUBAI, Feb 3 (Reuters) - A group of Iranian gunboats approached a U.S.-flagged tanker in the Strait of Hormuz north of ​Oman, maritime sources and a security consultancy said on Tuesday.

The ‌Iranian boats ordered the tanker, the Stena Imperative, to stop its engine and prepare ‌to be boarded before it could speed up and continue its voyage, maritime risk management group Vanguard said.

The vessel did not enter Iranian internal territorial waters and was escorted by a U.S. warship, the maritime risk ⁠management group said. An ‌American official confirmed it was U.S. flagged.

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations earlier said that a group of ‍armed boats attempted to intercept a vessel 16 nautical miles (30 km) north of Oman, without identifying the vessel or the boats.

The agency said it was investigating the ​incident, which happened in the inbound Traffic Separation Scheme of the ‌Strait of Hormuz.

Iran's semi-official Fars news agency cited unnamed Iranian officials as saying later on Tuesday that a vessel had entered Iranian territorial waters without the necessary legal permits, was warned and left the area "without any special security event taking place."

The strait links the Persian Gulf ⁠to the Gulf of Oman and the ​Arabian Sea beyond.

OPEC members Saudi Arabia, Iran, ​the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Iraq export most of their crude via the strait, mainly to Asia.

Three vessels, ‍two in 2023 ⁠and one in 2024, were seized by Iran near or in the strait. Some of the seizures followed U.S. seizures of tankers ⁠related to Iran.

(Reporting by Jonathan Saul, Tala Ramadan, Idrees Ali and Elwely Elwelly, ‌writing by Jaidaa Taha and Tala Ramadan; Editing by Sharon ‌Singleton, Alex Richardson and Bernadette Baum)

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